Courses

  • GRS GE 723: Adv Econ Geog
  • GRS GE 741: Geog Info Sys
  • GRS GE 756: Geography of Third World Development
    Theory and experience of Third World development. Emphasis on issues of income distribution, geographical and regional inequality, importance of location in development planning, efficiency and equity consideration, and models of, and strategies for, regional development.
  • GRS GE 794: Current Issues in Environmental Affairs
    Explores key concepts related to regimes and environmental diplomacy with a focus on a selected set of contemporary issues in international affairs. Fosters research on the negotiation and implementation of environmental treaties.
  • GRS GE 805: Spat Anal Gis
  • GRS GE 902: Student Intern
  • GRS GE 903: Res En+env Stud
  • GRS HI 609: Christendom Divided: Reformation and Religious Conflict in Early Modern Europe
    Religious change in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries centuries; the origins and causes of the Protestant Reformation; the Catholic Reformation; the resulting civil wars in the Germanies, France, and the Netherlands; and pertinent aspects of Tudor and Stuart England. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 812.
  • GRS HI 648: Twentieth Century Britain
    Victorian culture and society; decline of imperialism and impact of the two world wars; socialism and growth of the welfare state. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 822.
  • GRS HI 649: The Making of Modern Britain
    Political, social, and intellectual developments; emphasis on evolution of cabinet government and the party system; the industrial revolution and social problems; political reform and the emergence of democracy. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 821.
  • GRS HI 666: French Revolution and Napoleon
    Origins of the revolution; principal events in terms of political, social, and cultural impact on France and Europe; Napoleon's restructuring of France and Europe; the settlements of 1815. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 833.
  • GRS HI 674: Issues in Modern Russian and Soviet History, 1861–1956
    Modern Russia in the imperial and Soviet eras: from the Great Reforms of Alexander II through the end of Stalin's reign. Examines Russia's political, socioeconomic, and cultural transformation from the traditional society into the first Communist state. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 847.
  • GRS HI 698: African American History
    The history of African Americans from African origins to present time; consideration of slavery, reconstruction, and ethnic relations from the colonial era to our own time. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 871.
  • GRS HI 699: Teaching College History
    The goals, contents, and methods of instruction in history. General teaching-learning issues. Required of all teaching fellows.
  • GRS HI 702: Science and American Culture
    From the colonial period to the present. Such topics as the American reception of Copernicus and Newton, scientific exploration, the interaction of science and religion, the impact of science on social theory, the rise of "big science," and contemporary "science wars." This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 868.
  • GRS HI 708: Religious Thought in America
    Surveys many of the strategies that American religious thinkers have adopted for interpreting the cosmos, the social order, and human experience and examines the interaction of those strategies with broader currents of American culture. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 854.
  • GRS HI 721: The American Revolution, 1750-1800
    The political, economic, and ideological causes of the American War for Independence; the construction of a new political system amid the passions of a revolutionary upheaval; and the gradual emergence of a new economic and cultural order in the United States. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 856.
  • GRS HI 749: History of Religion in Precolonial Africa
    The study of the development of religious traditions in Africa during the period prior to European colonialism. An emphasis on both indigenous religions and the growth and spread of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in the continent as a whole. Also offered as GRS AA 882 and GRS RN 682.
  • GRS HI 750: History of the Atlantic World
    Examines the various interactions that shaped the Atlantic World, connecting Europe, Africa, and the Americas between 1400 and 1800. Begins by defining the political interaction, then emphasizes cultural exchange, religious conversion, and the revolutionary era. Also offered as GRS AA 885. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 885.
  • GRS HI 751: Environmental History of Africa
    Focus on the African environment and ecological systems over the past 150 years. Topics include climatic change, hydrography, agriculture, deforestation, soil erosion, disease, conservation, famine, and the role of colonialism and government policy in environmental change. This course cannot be taken for credit in addition to the course with the same title that was previously numbered GRS HI 894.

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